A Monitor That Finds The Source Of Polluted Air In Your Home

Many indoor air pollutants are colorless and odorless, which means people often fail to detect them.

A team of engineers at Michigan State University is testing a new technology, called AirSense, that not only warns of a problem with indoor air, but also identifies the source of the pollution and offers suggestions on how to remedy the situation.

AirSense is an intelligent, home-based indoor air quality, or IAQ, monitoring and analytics system designed to increase people’s awareness of their IAQ and help manage it in their homes.

“Different pollution sources generate different types of pollutants in different ways,” says Mi Zhang, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, who leads the team. “For example, oil-based cooking could generate remarkable amounts of harmful airborne particulate matter in a very short period of time that stay in the air for a long time. Household products such as disinfectants and pesticides contain and release numerous volatile organic compounds.

airsense(Credit: Michigan State University)

“Our technology leverages these differences to identify the source and forecast pollution levels to estimate the seriousness of the problem,” he adds.


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The technology also will provide a detailed weekly IAQ profiling report that helps people better understand how their household activities impact air quality.

Poor air quality could pose significant risks to people’s health and is the leading cause of respiratory infections, chronic lung diseases, and cancers. “Our technology would be very helpful for people who are vulnerable to poor air quality, such as the elderly and children with asthma,” Zhang says.

Although currently designed for home use, AirSense could eventually be applied in public spaces such as office buildings, shopping malls and subway stations.

Zhang says they hope the technology will be available for public use soon.

The work appears in the proceedings of the 2016 ACM International Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing, held last September in Germany.

Source: Michigan State University

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